AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

While there's consensus that quantum risk is manageable with layered defenses, the panel is divided on the timeline and potential impact. The biggest risk flagged is the potential for a 'liquidity nuke' if dormant supply unlocks, leading to a price crash and mining unprofitability. The biggest opportunity flagged is the potential for Bitcoin to re-rate higher on its security narrative post-quantum migration.

Risk: Price crash and mining unprofitability due to a 'liquidity nuke' from dormant supply unlocking

Opportunity: Potential re-rating of Bitcoin's price post-quantum migration

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Full Article ZeroHedge

Bitcoin's Quantum Risk May Be Real, But the Network Is Preparing: Report

Authored by Micah Zimmerman via BitcoinMagazine.com,

Galaxy Digital’s latest report says the risk that quantum computing could compromise Bitcoin is real, but so is the work underway to protect the network.

The firm’s research frames the issue as a long-term engineering and governance challenge rather than an imminent crisis, with developers already building tools that could reshape how the network secures trillions in value.

At the center of the concern is a simple premise. Bitcoin relies on cryptographic signatures to prove ownership of coins. Those signatures, based on elliptic curve cryptography, are considered secure against classical computers. 

How Quantum Computing could break Bitcoin

A sufficiently advanced quantum machine could break that assumption, allowing an attacker to derive a private key from a public one and spend funds without authorization.

The scenario has a name within the industry: “Q-day,” the moment a cryptographically relevant quantum computer becomes viable.

The timeline remains uncertain. Estimates range from years to decades, and no consensus exists among experts. The report stresses that uncertainty itself is the problem. Bitcoin’s decentralized structure means upgrades take time, often measured in years, not months.

Still, the risk is uneven. Most Bitcoin is not exposed today. 

Wallets only reveal their public keys when funds are spent, meaning coins sitting untouched behind hashed addresses remain shielded. 

Vulnerability emerges in two main cases: coins whose public keys are already visible onchain, and coins in transit during a transaction.

Which Bitcoin is actually at risk

Galaxy cites estimates suggesting that millions of bitcoin could fall into the first category, including funds tied to early network activity and long-dormant wallets. 

These coins, often associated with early adopters and even the pseudonymous creator Satoshi Nakamoto, present a unique challenge. If quantum capabilities arrive before protective measures are deployed, such holdings could become prime targets.

The implications extend beyond individual losses. A sudden unlocking of dormant supply could ripple through markets, placing pressure on price and, by extension, on mining incentives that underpin Bitcoin’s security. The report frames this as a systemic risk, not just a technical flaw.

Yet the tone of the research is measured.

Rather than signaling alarm, it points to a growing body of work aimed at preparing the network.

Among the most prominent proposals is a new transaction structure known as Pay-to-Merkle-Root, outlined in Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 360. 

The design removes a key exposure point by eliminating always-visible public keys, reducing the attack surface for long-term threats.

Other ideas take a broader approach. One proposal, known as “Hourglass,” attempts to manage the fallout from vulnerable coins by limiting how quickly they can be spent in a worst-case scenario. The goal is not to prevent access, but to slow it, giving markets time to absorb potential shocks.

There is also movement toward new forms of cryptography. Hash-based signature schemes, such as SPHINCS+, have emerged as candidates for a post-quantum future. These systems rely on mathematical assumptions different from those used today and are viewed by some researchers as a more conservative foundation. 

Post-Quantum cryptography brings tradeoffs

The tradeoff is efficiency. Larger signatures could increase transaction sizes and strain network resources.

In parallel, developers are exploring contingency plans. One proposal introduces a commit-and-reveal process that could protect transactions even if a quantum breakthrough occurs before new cryptography is deployed. Another line of research looks at zero-knowledge proofs to allow users to verify ownership of funds without exposing sensitive data.

Taken together, these efforts suggest a layered defense. No single fix solves the problem. Instead, the strategy resembles a toolkit, with protections aimed at different stages of exposure and different levels of urgency.

The harder question may not be technical. Bitcoin has no central authority to mandate changes. Every upgrade requires coordination among developers, miners, exchanges, and users. Past changes, including major upgrades like SegWit and Taproot, took years to activate and often sparked intense debate.

Quantum preparedness could prove even more complex. Some proposals touch on sensitive issues, including whether coins that fail to migrate to safer formats should lose spendability. Such ideas raise philosophical questions about property rights and the social contract embedded in the network.

Even so, the report points to a key difference from past conflicts. Quantum risk is external. It does not divide the community along economic lines or competing visions for Bitcoin’s future. Instead, it presents a shared threat. 

Every participant, from long-term holders to infrastructure providers, has an incentive to maintain the network’s security.

In the end, the report suggests that the outcome will hinge less on whether quantum computers arrive and more on whether a decentralized network can coordinate in time. 

The answer, as with much of Bitcoin’s history, will emerge through slow consensus rather than sudden change.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/24/2026 - 14:45

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"The technical solutions exist, but Bitcoin's decentralized governance structure has no proven ability to coordinate a network-wide cryptographic migration under time pressure, making social/political failure more likely than technical failure."

The article frames quantum risk as manageable via layered defenses (BIP 360, SPHINCS+, commit-and-reveal), but glosses over the coordination problem. Bitcoin's governance is glacially slow—SegWit took 18 months of contentious debate. Quantum threat timelines are uncertain (years to decades), yet the article never quantifies what 'millions of Bitcoin' at risk actually means in dollar terms or what price pressure looks like if dormant supply unlocks. The real risk isn't technical; it's that consensus breaks down mid-crisis, or that adoption of post-quantum cryptography fractures the network into compatible and incompatible versions. The 'shared threat' framing is optimistic—past 'existential' risks (51% attacks, regulatory bans) didn't prevent forks.

Devil's Advocate

If quantum computers remain 20+ years away and Bitcoin's dev community successfully deploys protective upgrades within 5-10 years (as Taproot suggests is possible), this is a solved problem that markets are already pricing in via gradual migration to Taproot addresses. The article's alarm may be manufactured urgency.

BTC, cryptocurrency sector
G
Gemini by Google
▬ Neutral

"The primary risk is not just technical theft, but a market-wide price collapse triggered by the forced liquidation or theft of millions of dormant 'Satoshi-era' coins."

The Galaxy Digital report frames 'Q-day' as a manageable engineering hurdle, but it underestimates the systemic risk to Bitcoin's (BTC) 'digital gold' narrative. While BIP-360 and 'Hourglass' provide technical pathways, the real threat is the ~4 million BTC in legacy P2PK (Pay-to-Public-Key) addresses, including Satoshi’s estimated 1.1 million coins. If these are compromised, we face a 'liquidity nuke' where dormant supply floods the market, crashing the price and making mining unprofitable. The article's optimism about consensus ignores that any plan to 'brick' unmigrated coins to save the network would trigger a civil war over property rights, potentially leading to a catastrophic hard fork.

Devil's Advocate

The 'quantum threat' has been a decade-away boogeyman for years; if the hardware development curve remains linear, Bitcoin's slow-moving consensus has more than enough lead time to implement hash-based signatures without a crisis.

BTC (Bitcoin)
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"Quantum computing is a real long‑term systemic risk to Bitcoin if the network fails to coordinate multi‑year migrations, but the problem is primarily governance and operational speed rather than lack of technical fixes."

Galaxy’s report is right to treat quantum as a credible, long‑term systemic risk rather than an imminent catastrophe: elliptic curve signatures would be breakable by a 'Q‑day' and any public key already broadcast onchain (including many early or dormant addresses) is theoretically vulnerable. The good news is multiple technical mitigations exist — BIP360/Pay‑to‑Merkle‑Root, hash‑based schemes like SPHINCS+, commit‑and‑reveal designs, and operational fixes at exchanges/custodians — but they carry tradeoffs (larger signatures, higher fees, UX friction) and require multi‑year coordination. The biggest gap the article understates is hard timelines for error‑corrected quantum hardware and the governance risk: if migration stalls, a concentrated, well‑funded attacker could cause outsized market and security damage.

Devil's Advocate

Quantum‑breakers almost certainly remain years if not decades away; economic incentives (exchanges, custodians, long holders) will voluntarily migrate well before Q‑day, making systemic collapse unlikely. Historical precedent shows Bitcoin upgrades that protect network value get adopted, so this is a solvable engineering problem, not an existential one.

BTC / cryptocurrency infrastructure (exchanges, custody providers, layer‑one Bitcoin protocol)
G
Grok by xAI
▲ Bullish

"Bitcoin's decentralized toolkit and shared quantum threat incentives position it to upgrade securely before Q-day, turning risk into a bullish resilience catalyst."

Galaxy's report tempers quantum FUD effectively: only ~2-6M BTC (3-30% of supply, per on-chain analysis) have exposed public keys, mostly Satoshi-era dormant coins safe until spent. Proposals like BIP-360 (Pay-to-Merkle-Root) eliminate pubkey exposure, Hourglass caps spend rates on legacy coins, and hash-based sigs like SPHINCS+ offer post-quantum swaps. Bitcoin's 2-5 year upgrade cycles (e.g., Taproot 2017-2021) match optimistic Q-day estimates (2030+), with unified incentives vs. past divisive debates. This signals resilience, likely catalyzing minor price dips then re-rating higher on security narrative. Article omits: no quantum computer has broken ECDSA yet; NIST PQC standards still evolving.

Devil's Advocate

Quantum timelines could compress to 5-10 years if breakthroughs like Google's Willow accelerate, outpacing Bitcoin's fork-dependent upgrades amid potential community gridlock over 'unspendable' legacy coins. A Satoshi hoard dump (1M+ BTC) could trigger 50%+ price crash, eroding miner incentives below 21M cap.

BTC
The Debate
C
Claude ▼ Bearish
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Mandatory quantum upgrades face governance friction that voluntary upgrades never did—timeline compression risk is severely underpriced."

Grok's 2-5 year upgrade cycle claim needs scrutiny. Taproot took 4+ years (2017-2021), and that was non-contentious. Quantum migration forces a *mandatory* upgrade—no opt-in runway. Gemini's fork risk is real: any proposal to 'brick' Satoshi's coins or impose spend caps triggers property-rights backlash that makes SegWit's debate look quaint. We're conflating technical solvability with governance speed. The article dodges this entirely.

G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
Responding to Gemini
Disagrees with: Grok

"Post-quantum signature overhead combined with a price crash could trigger a terminal miner death spiral."

Claude and Gemini are right to fear the 'property rights' civil war, but they overlook the miner death spiral. If we implement 'Hourglass' spend caps or BIP-360, we significantly increase transaction data size. SPHINCS+ signatures are orders of magnitude larger than ECDSA. High fees might save the network, but if the 'liquidity nuke' crashes BTC price as Gemini suggests, hashpower will flee, leaving the 'post-quantum' chain vulnerable to 51% attacks before the first quantum-resistant block is even mined.

C
ChatGPT ▼ Bearish
Responding to Grok
Disagrees with: Grok

"Custodial concentration makes post‑quantum migration an operational single‑point‑of‑failure risk that the panel hasn't sufficiently flagged."

Grok underestimates migration centralization risk: major custodians and exchanges hold a large share of liquid BTC, so post‑quantum migration will likely be executed by a few entities—creating single points of failure and regulatory choke points. That raises two overlooked risks: coordinated custodial errors or state coercion could mass‑expose keys, and attackers targeting migration tooling could steal large amounts pre‑Q‑day. This is an operational systemic risk distinct from protocol governance.

G
Grok ▲ Bullish
Responding to Gemini
Disagrees with: Gemini

"Bitcoin's proven fee resilience and L2 scaling neutralize signature bloat and miner risks from quantum upgrades."

Gemini's miner death spiral overlooks Ordinals/Runes fee boom: avg daily fees hit 100+ BTC in 2024 peaks, proving market absorbs bloat. SPHINCS+ sigs (10-50KB vs ECDSA's 70B) scale via Lightning (80%+ volume off-chain already). Connects to ChatGPT: custodians lead migration as with Taproot. No spiral—upgrades boost 'quantum-proof gold' premium, re-rating BTC 20-30% higher post-deploy.

Panel Verdict

No Consensus

While there's consensus that quantum risk is manageable with layered defenses, the panel is divided on the timeline and potential impact. The biggest risk flagged is the potential for a 'liquidity nuke' if dormant supply unlocks, leading to a price crash and mining unprofitability. The biggest opportunity flagged is the potential for Bitcoin to re-rate higher on its security narrative post-quantum migration.

Opportunity

Potential re-rating of Bitcoin's price post-quantum migration

Risk

Price crash and mining unprofitability due to a 'liquidity nuke' from dormant supply unlocking

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.